GetLoans.com Blog

Ask About The Appraiser, Or Get Screwed: Part II.

April 1st, 2011


I blogged just a few days ago about how a client went with an online lender, and that lender sent an appraiser to the client's home who was not local to the marketplace, and the appraised value ended up coming in low enough that the client had to pay $45,000 out of pocket to pay the loan down. I am not sure how spending $45,000 in cash Read the rest of this entry »

Bookmark and Share

Ask About The Appraiser, Or Get Screwed!

March 23rd, 2011

I don't know how many times I'll have to say it, "WHEN SHOPPING FOR A MORTGAGE ASK ABOUT THE APPRAISER!" In fact, don't ask, just read what I have to say first. I have repeatedly said on this blog Read the rest of this entry »

Bookmark and Share

Watch Out For Appraisal Contingencies When Buying A Home

June 20th, 2010

When buying a home the appraisal contingency addendum in a sales contract says the home buyer has a certain number of days (the date is negotiable) to get an appraisal that is equal to or greater than the sales price in the sales contract. If the appraisal is less than the sales price the buyer can Read the rest of this entry »

Bookmark and Share

Appraisal News: Home Valuation Code of Conduct (HVCC)

September 7th, 2009

HVCC

HVCC, the acronym for “Home Valuation Code of Conduct”, is the result of a legal settlement between NY attorney general Andrew Cuomo and Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac to assure that appraisers would not be unduly influenced by lenders in the appraisal process. Before this ruling, mortgage brokers and bank loan officers would order the appraisal for a new home loan from any licensed appraiser, usually one they knew professionally for many years. After this ruling, appraisals are not allowed to be ordered by the mortgage broker or loan officer, the bank now orders them from an "Appraisal Management Company" (AMC). Mortgage brokers and loan officers are no longer allowed to have any direct contact with the appraiser.  Appraisers are supposedly being more scrutinized by the AMC's. The law became effective on May 1st 2009 and has been causing problems ever since for buyers, sellers, and industry professionals across the country.

With evidence of mismanagement and fraud in the industry in the past, the attempt to ensure that residential properties are not appraised for more than their true worth is understandable. The intention was to stop lenders from pushing appraisers for higher values to help "make the deal work." The belief was that this, in part, is what drove property values to unrealistic levels. The process under the new law takes ordering the appraisal away from anyone with a vested interest in getting the loan done. Read the rest of this entry »

Bookmark and Share